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Overview of IIC and
Industrial Analytics:
Fueling the IIoT Revolution
Wael William Diab
IIC Liaison WG Chair, Technology WG Chair, Industrial Analytics TG Chair
IIC SC Member
Senior Director, Huawei
3rd RRI International Symposium, November 2017
Acknowledgements
Eric Harper (ABB)
Shi-wan Lin (Thingswise)
Stephen Mellor (IIC)
Will Sobel (Vimana)
2017年12月6日 2
Agenda
Overview of IIC
Industrial Analytics Task Group: Overview and Motivation
Industrial Analytics Framework (IIAF)
Looking Ahead: What’s on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
Concluding Remarks
2017年12月6日 3
The Industrial Internet is leading the next economic revolution
4 GDP data extracted from the Futurist 2007
Standards
Technology
Connectivity
Research Academia
Systems
Integration
Security
Government
Big Data Industries
Data Standards are Largely
Proprietary, Works-in-
Progress, or Non-Existent
70% of IoT Professionals
Say Interoperability is the
Biggest Challenge
59% of IT Pros Say They
Have Not Started Preparing
for Expected Data Increase
Many Countries Have
Insufficient Conditions to
Support Widespread
Adoption
36% of Executives Say
System Barriers Between
Departments Prevent
Collection and Correlation of
Data Research into the Industrial
Internet has Only Existed in
the Past 3 Years
73% of Companies Have
Not Made Concrete Plans for
the Industrial Internet
14% of IoT Professionals
Say Security is the Biggest
Challenge
Urgent Need to Refocus
Education to Prepare for the
Upcoming Digital
Workplace
3% of IoT Professionals Say
Connectivity is the Biggest
Challenge
Yet there are current roadblocks to widespread adoption
5
The Industrial Internet: A $32 trillion opportunity
The IIC Global Ecosystem of Stakeholders: Things are coming together
6
Things are coming together.
Academia Standards
Research Systems Integration
Government
Industries Connectivity
Technology
Big Data
Security
Vision: The Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC) is the world’s leading organization transforming business and society by accelerating the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). Mission: Our mission is to deliver a trustworthy Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) in which the world’s systems and devices are securely connected and controlled to deliver transformational outcomes.
An open, neutral “sandbox” where the IIoT Ecosystem of global industry, academia and government meet to collaborate, innovate and enable.
• More than 250 organizations from more than 30 countries and growing
• 27 active testbeds all over the world from more than a dozen different segments
• Numerous publications including Reference Architecture; Security Framework; Analytics WP
Industrial Internet Consortium Vision & Mission
The IIC is an open, neutral “sandbox” where industry, academia and government meet to collaborate, innovate and enable.
IIC Founders, Contributing Members, & Large Industry Members
IIC Founding and Contributing Members
IIC Founders, Contributing Members, & Large Industry Members
9
IIC Small Industry Members
IIC Small Industry Members
IIC Nonprofit, Academic, & Government Members
Testbeds & Projects
Business Model, Project Mgmt, Practices
Project Specifications & Reports
Architecture &Design
Requirements for Standards
IIoT TECHNOLOGIES
IIRA Security
Framework
Topics and Themes
Business Strategy Solution Lifecycle
IIC General IIoT Ecosystem
Project Toolkit
Business Strategy and Solution Lifecycle
Organizational Structure of the Industrial Internet Consortium
2017年12月6日 14
Technology Working Group
Charter: To define and develop common architectures, by selecting from standards available to all, from open, neutral, international, consensus organizations and reviewing relevant technologies that comprise the ecosystems that will make the industrial internet work.
The Technology WG presently has 12 teams:
15
• Architecture Task Group • Reference Architecture Editing Contributing Group • Connectivity Task Group • Distributed Data Interoperability & Management Task
Group • Industrial Analytics Task Group • Edge Computing Task Group
• Innovation Task Group • IT & OT Task Group • Interoperability Task Group • Safety Task Group • Verticals Taxonomy • Vocabulary Task Group
16
Architecture Description for IIC Built on Top of ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2011
Implementation Viewpoint
Functional Viewpoint
Usage Viewpoint
Business Viewpoint
biz values, objectives & capabilities
Usage activities
Functional decomposition & structure Interfaces & interactions
Activity &functional to technologies mapping
Biz decision makers System Engineers Product Managers
System Engineers Product Managers System Architects
Architects Engineers Developers Integrators Deployment Operations
Biz View
Usage View
Functional View
Implementation View
Stakeholders
How
What
Why
Verb
Noun
Security Working Group
Charter: To define a security and privacy framework to be applied to technology adopted by the IIC. The framework will establish best practices and be used to identify security gaps in existing technologies.
Current Priorities:
• Build End-to-End Security Use Cases • Apply Security Use Cases to each of the Use Case Groups • Derive requirements from each Use Case Identify what is common (architectural) Identify what is one-off (application-specific) • Design Secure Integration Framework based on combined use
cases (with Technology Team) - II Security Framework v1.0 Published September 2016
• Build testbeds - Testbed Evaluation Documentation
Business Strategy & Solution Lifecycle (BSSL) Working Group
Charter: To provide guidance and best practices for all aspects of developing and operating an Industrial Internet solution: business-case creation, architecture design, technology selection, implementation, testing, rollout and operations.
Goals:
• Help companies leverage the potential of the Industrial Internet
• Increase return on investment, manage project risks more efficiently, and establish a foundation for evaluating solutions and their compliance.
• Provide a foundation for defining Industrial Internet Systems certification and compliance programs, to be shared within and outside of the Industrial Internet Consortium.
• Business Strategy for Industrial Internet of Things Task Group
• Use Cases Task Group, Ecosystem Task Group
18
The IIoT Ecosystem: Criticality of Liaisons
December 6, 2017 19
IIC has more than 28 existing liaisons and currently has 36 more in flight! That’s impressive for an organization that had its 3rd birthday on March 27th, 2017!
Below is a sample of the ecosystem that IIC is creating in the industry
Building Coalitions to Address the IoT Ecosystem
IIC Vision: The Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC) is the world’s leading organization transforming business and society by accelerating the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). IIC Mission: Our mission is to deliver a trustworthy Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) in which the world’s systems and devices are securely connected and controlled to deliver transformational outcomes.
LWG Mission: The IIC Liaison Working Group
Facilitates external interactions with the goal of building relationships for IIC
Coordinates internal stakeholder requests and interest with external organizations
Building Coalitions to Address the IoT Ecosystem
Liaison Working Group Strategic Objectives Build and coordinate collaborative, working relationships inclusive of government
organizations, formal standards development organizations and open source industry organizations
Working with peer working groups, identify gaps in the portfolio of IIC and create then leverage relationships for IIC
Make strategic recommendations to IIC Steering Committee to grow ecosystem
Example areas of collaboration Joint workshops conducted with partners
E.g. IIC:IVI (Japan), IIC:CAICT (China), IIC:I4.0 (Germany), IIC:EEC (Industry)
Technical workshops e.g. recent technology and security workshop with NIST Liaison partnerships with organizations focusing on verticals Liaison partnerships with global SDOs focused on IoT technologies
E.g. ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 41 (IoT), ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 27 (Security), oneM2M, IEEE P2413 and 802.24 etc.
Liaison partnerships with global SDOs focused on related areas E.g. ISO/IEC JTC 1/WG 9 (Big Data)
The IIC and standards organizations
22
The IIC is not a standards organization.
The IIC will:
• establish a reference architecture
• evaluate existing standards against it
• identify requirements, and
• propose these requirements to standards organizations
Requirements are different for the Industrial Internet compared to consumer IoT.
Marketing Working Group
Current Priorities:
• Ensure that the strategy of the IIC is carried out
• Increase market awareness of the Industrial Internet and the IIC
• Create compelling new content around innovation that is happening/innovation to come
• Focus on thought leadership and vertical markets
23
Charter: To establish the Industrial Internet Consortium as a community that champions innovation in connected intelligent machines and processes.
Charter: To accelerate the creation of testbeds for the Industrial Internet.
Current Priorities:
• Assist members in identifying, defining and gaining approval for their testbeds • Identify and communicate funding resources for IIC testbeds • Provide processes and infrastructure for efficient & effective operations
Testbed Working Group
30
What? Why? How? How Much? Create Experiment
Approval Planned/Resourced Operational Results
Task:
Phase:
Goal:
Concept Feasibility Development Operation
Testbed Lifecycle Phases
Current Publicly Announced Testbeds
31
What is an IIC Testbed?
CONTROLLED EXPERIMENTATION PLATFORM
~conforming to an IIC technical references, where solutions can be deployed and tested in environments resembling real-world conditions
Content restricted to IIC Members
Not for External Publication
32
Explore untested technologies or existing technologies
working together in an untested manner
Create innovative new products, services, and business practices
Generate requirements and priorities for standards organizations Testbeds & Projects
Business Model, Project Mgmt, Practices
Project Specifications & Reports
Architecture &Design
32
Testbed Results
Innovation
• What innovations have been realized? Any industry impact?
• What best practices have been learned
Standards
• What noteworthy standards does the testbed employ? Their purpose?
• What noteworthy standards is the testbed influencing? Which SDOs?
• What gaps have been identified that should become a future standard?
Technical References
• What changes would you like to see in IIC Technical References?
• What influence has the testbed had on IIC Technical References?
33
Agenda
Overview of IIC
Industrial Analytics Task Group: Overview and Motivation
Industrial Analytics Framework (IIAF)
Looking Ahead: What’s on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
Concluding Remarks
2017年12月6日 34
Industrial Analytics is Part of the Technology Working Group
Charter: To define and develop common architectures, by selecting from standards available to all, from open, neutral, international, consensus organizations and reviewing relevant technologies that comprise the ecosystems that will make the industrial internet work.
Chairs: Diab (Huawei), Harper (ABB), Lin (Thingswise)
The Technology WG presently has 11 standing task groups:
35
• Architecture Task Group • Connectivity Task Group • Distributed Data Interoperability & Management Task
Group • Edge Computing Task Group • Industrial Analytics Task Group
And a number of contributing groups
• Innovation Task Group • Interoperability Task Group • IT & OT Task Group • Networking Task Group • Safety Task Group • Vocabulary Task Group
Technology Working Group Organization
Connectivity TG
Innovation TG
Architecture TG
Interoperability TG
Technology Working Group
IT & OT TG
DDIM TG
Networking TG
Industrial Analytics TG
Safety TG
Vocabulary TG
Edge Computing TG
Industrial Analytics Task Group
Who We Are and What We Do?
Mission The IA Task Group is responsible for comprehensibly defining the properties of realizable analytical
techniques and methods for deriving meaning from, and adding value to, industrial systems.
Scope To achieve its mission, the task group:
• Will deliver a technical report detailing capabilities, requirements, existing and new open standards, and technologies presented in an Industrial Internet Analytics Framework
• Influence / drive requirements in other IIC teams and working groups
• Catalog various technology choices for analytics
• Analytics on both data in motion and at rest
• Hierarchical and distributed considerations of industrial analytics
• Data integrity interactions for analytics
• Analytics for safety and security of operation
Chairs: Diab, Wael William (Huawei), Harper, Eric (ABB), Sobel, Will (System Insights)
Membership: 120 members from 60 organizations represented per Kavi as of 11-06-2017
37
Industrial Analytics Task Group
Work and Deliverables Landscape
Initial deliverables are a White Paper and Industrial Internet Analytics Framework
Group’s target schedule is
• Q1 2017 for White Paper Completed 0317
• Q3 2017 for first release of Framework Completed 1017
• Q2 2018 for second release of Framework Initial exploratory phase
Internal stakeholder for liaison relationships
• E.g. ISO/IEC JTC 1/WG 9 (Big Data), MESA
Membership engagement Initiatives
• Invited speakers
• Host Industrial Analytics panels (session and plenary)
Represent IIC IA topics at liaison partner events and external engagements
• Big Data workshop (JTC 1/WG 9 in Ireland), analyst/reporter calls and today!
Coordinate industrial analytics interests within Technology Working Group family e.g. Edge, Safety, Vocab etc.
Collaborate with internal stakeholders outside of TWG e.g. I3C, LWG, BSSL, Marketing etc.
Identify and work on cross-cutting issues related to analytics
38
IIC Industrial Analytics General Session Expert Panel (Dec 16)
• Participants • Wael Diab (Huawei) Co-Chair / Moderator • Eric Harper (ABB) Co-Chair • Nilesh Auti (TechMahindra) Panelist • Terrence Barr (Electric Imp) Panelist • Brent Hodges (Dell) Panelist • Shi-Wan Lin (Thingswise) Panelist • Shyam Nath (GE) Panelist • Sven Schrecker (Intel) Panelist • About 70+ in the audience
• Topics included • Overview of Analytics in the ecosystem • Tiered analytics • Technical challenges and opportunities
for analytics • Safeguards in the system design • Use cases and vertical examples • Smart security for analytics
39
International data analysis workshop (5th JUNE, 2017)
41
10 speakers, About 200 participants from 100+ entities, in CAICT, Beijing
Agenda
Overview of IIC
Industrial Analytics Task Group: Overview and Motivation
Industrial Analytics Framework (IIAF)
Looking Ahead: What’s on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
Concluding Remarks
2017年12月6日 42
Introducing IIAF
• This presentation provides an overview of the Industrial IoT Analytics Framework (IIAF)
• Is a first-of-its-kind blueprint that addresses the entire industrial analytics ecosystem
• The target audience is IIoT decision makers, such as system architects / designers and business leaders, looking to successfully deploy industrial analytics systems
• Provides information about concepts and components of the IIoT system, which architects require to develop and deploy a viable analytical system in an industrial setting
• Takes into account industrial requirements, goals and cross-cutting concerns. Maps analytics to the supported IIoT applications, ensuring that business leaders can realize the full potential of analytics and thus enable more-informed decision making
43
Industrial Analytics: The engine driving the emerging IT/OT revolution
2017年12月6日 44
MAIN TOPICS • Framework overview • Business View Point
• Creating Business Value
• Usage View Point • Getting started with Industrial Analytics
• Functional View Point • Implementation View Point
• Design considerations
• AI and Big Data • Analytic Methods & Modelling • System Characteristics and
Crosscutting Functions Related to Analytics
• Efficiency • Utilization • Consistency • Continuity • Safety
OT Focus
• Agility • Cost
reduction • Security • Speed • Business
Insight
IT Focus
Traditional enablement
Impacts: • Data • Analytics • Interconnect • Control • Interaction • Insight
IIoT enablement
Industrial IoT Analytics Framework Overview
Provides guidance and assistance in the development, documentation, communication and deployment of Industrial Internet of Things Analytics Systems.
The IIAF does this by taking a holistic view of the entire industrial IoT ecosystem that the analytics is operating in. A number of view points are considered along with emerging technologies in this space and cross-cutting concerns:
• Business viewpoint • E.g. Creation of Business Value
• Usage View Point • E.g. Getting started with Industrial Analytics
• Functional View Point • E.g. Analytics Architecture Objectives and Constraints • E.g. Analytics Functionality
• Implementation View Point • E.g. Design considerations • E.g. Analytics Capacity Consideration
• Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Big Data • Analytic Methods & Modelling • System Characteristics and Crosscutting Functions
Related to Analytics
Within the Industrial space, the merger of IT and OT is providing for innovation and creating disciplines such as condition monitoring to increase uptime and reduce operational costs (OpEx)
“ ”
“ Analytics may be broadly defined as a discipline transforming data into information through systematic analysis. Industrial Analytics is the use of analytics in IIoT systems.
If data is the new oil, data analytics is the new engine that propels the IIoT transformation.
“
46
IIAF Architectural Description Built on ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2011
Implementation Viewpoint
Functional Viewpoint
Usage Viewpoint
Business Viewpoint
biz values, objectives & capabilities
Usage activities
Functional decomposition & structure Interfaces & interactions
Activity &functional to technologies mapping
Biz decision makers System Engineers Product Managers
System Engineers Product Managers System Architects
Architects Engineers Developers Integrators Deployment Operations
Biz View
Usage View
Functional View
Implementation View
Stakeholders
How
What
Why
Verb
Noun
Business View Point – Creating Business Value
A survey by Deloitte shows predictive analytics to be at the top of the list
Industrial analytics, applied to machine data for operational insights, is as an engine driving the convergence of OT and IT, and ultimately value creation for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
“ What is it? Attends to concerns of the identification of stakeholders and their business vision, values and objectives in establishing an industrial analytics system in its business and regulatory context
Why is it Important? IA provides crucial insights for decision makers, which in turn translate to an increase in the efficiency of labor and capital, which determine long-term GDP growth
A survey by IoT Analytics GmbH found 69% of business leaders consider industrial analytics crucial for their businesses within 5 years
Usage View Point – Getting Started with Industrial Analytics
“Industrial analytics are used to identify and recognize machine operational and behavioral patterns, make fast and accurate predictions and act with confidence at the points of decision”
Analytics fall into 3 areas:
Descriptive
Predictive
Prescriptive
The framework introduces unique requirements when planning to deploy industrial analytics
What is it? Addresses the concerns of expected system usage.
Functional View Point – Architecture Objectives and Constraints
An end-to-end IIoT system in the IIRA is functionally decomposed into five functional domains:
Control
Operations
Information
Application
Business
What is it? focuses on the functional components in an industrial analytics system, their structure and interrelations and the relation and interactions of the system with external elements, to support the usages and activities of the overall system.
Figure 4-1. Analytics Mapping to the Industrial Internet Reference Architecture
Implementation View Point – Design Considerations
“One of the common questions is where the analytics should be performed.”
Considerations such as scope, response time and reliability, bandwidth, capacity, security, volume, velocity, variety, analytics maturity, temporal correlation, provenance, compliance etc. determine where the analytics run.
The framework introduces a table with these factors
What is it? Deals with the technologies needed to implement functional components (functional viewpoint), their communication schemes and their lifecycle procedures. Major sections include design and capacity considerations as well as deployment models and data preprocessing, transformation and curation. Below is an example of design considerations
Emerging Technologies – Artificial Intelligence and Big Data
2017年12月6日 51 Example of Multi-Typed Data Processing in Big Data Analytic Systems
What is it? Innovations in a number of areas related to AI and Big Data are being applied to IA. The framework looks at taxonomies of artificial intelligence and emerging computational techniques in big data in relation to industrial analytics.
Figure 6-2 Artificial Intelligence (AI)
In IIoT applications, machine learning and deep learning provide new approaches to build complex models of a system or systems using a data-driven approach.
“ Big data requires computational systems and networks to be designed around the data. It will transform how businesses operate and the digital/physical divide.
“
Figure 6-8 Deep learning workflow
Figure 7-4 The model building process
Analytics Methods and Modelling – Model Building
What is it? Survey of methods, models, algorithms and frameworks used for industrial analytics applications.
Figure 7-5 Splitting data for cross validation Figure 7-6 Confusion matrix showing types of classification errors for a binary classification problem
Relationship with other IIC documents
2017年12月6日 53
Figure 1-1 IIC Technical Publication Organization
Key takeaways
• As a fledgling discipline combining advances in mathematics, computer science and engineering in the context of Information Technologies (IT) and Operational Technologies (OT) convergence, industrial analytics plays a crucial rule in the success of any IIoT system
• The IIAF is the first blueprint that decision makers, such as IIoT system architects and business leaders, can use to deploy industrial analytics systems
• The IIAF provides a common understanding and encourages interoperability across the IIoT ecosystem
• Takes into account industrial requirements, goals and cross-cutting concerns
2017年12月6日 54
Agenda
Overview of IIC
Industrial Analytics Task Group: Overview and Motivation
Industrial Analytics Framework (IIAF)
Looking Ahead: What’s on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
Concluding Remarks
2017年12月6日 55
Industrial Analytics Task Group
What is on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
It is a very exciting time to be working on analytics, please join us!
• Tremendous reception to the IIC White Paper and IIAF
• Emerging technologies such as Big Data and AI fueling the analytics evolution
• Increasing recognition of the its importance and real world deployment
Evangelize the work of IIC on Analytics
• Continue with the rollout of IIAF and related publications (e.g. JOI)
• Translation of IA TG deliverables
• Extension of deliverables for specific geographies and verticals
• Engage with liaisons, develop new liaisons, expert speakers and planning panels
Launch work on the next release of the framework – IIAF 2.0
• Brainstorming on next gen work including depth, breadth, cross-cutting, verticals etc.
• Formalizing the ideas into a plan and starting the work on the document
Within IIC, develop crosscutting areas further and deeper collaboration with Testbeds and BSSL
Goal is build upon the successful IIAF and continue to expand the IA blueprint 56
Agenda
Overview of IIC
Industrial Analytics Task Group: Overview and Motivation
Industrial Analytics Framework (IIAF)
Looking Ahead: What’s on the Horizon for Industrial Analytics
Concluding Remarks
2017年12月6日 57
Concluding Remarks: It Takes An Ecosystem!
Big Data, Analytics and IoT are 3 sides of the same coin!
• IoT is focused on sensor networks that source the data
• Big Data is focused on compute architectures that process the data
• Analytics is focused on the consumption of the data to create value
Successfully deploying industrial analytics is key to realizing the full IIoT business potential
• Requires consideration of the technology, industrial requirements, vertical applications driving the business and a look at the entire platform
IIAF is a first-of-its-kind blueprint for decision makers that addresses the entire ecosystem
IIC, its Technology WG and IA TG are working with a coalition of partners. For instance*
• IIAF that defines the overall framework, business drivers and reference requirements
• ISO/IEC JTC 1/WG 9 (Big Data) is looking at the compute BDRA
• ECC is working on edge technologies
• CAICT/AII is looking at the entire ecosystem and providing a China perspective
* Above not a comprehensive list but for example
Concluding Remarks:
IIC Analytics White Paper and Framework Useful Links
IIAF (Published 1017) https://www.iiconsortium.org/pdf/IIC_Industrial_Analytics_Framework_Oct_2017.pdf
White Paper (Published 0317) https://www.iiconsortium.org/pdf/Industrial_Analytics-the_engine_driving_IIoT_revolution_20170321_FINAL.pdf
Press release on IIAF http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20171024005049/en/Industrial-Internet-Consortium-Publishes-Industrial-IoT-Analytics
Video Discussing IIC’s Industrial Analytics https://youtu.be/g0rs5YlMqtA
2017年12月6日 59
Things are coming together.
Community. Collaboration. Convergence.
www.iiconsortium.org
November 2017